I think where the bounces goes is really a matter of mailserver
configuration more than PHP itself... not sure about that really though ...
I only use the mail() function to send mail from the website to the
webmaster ... so that I don't have to expose the actual email addy on the
site

At 03:02 09-04-2004, Jochem Maas wrote:
Justin Patrin wrote:
Sounds alot more like advertising than sanity ... there's not much
trickery in using the mail() function ... only if you want to attach
files can it get a bit tricky (encoding the file and inserting the
result), but in reality, there's

Hello,
On 04/08/2004 08:25 PM, Ryan Jameson wrote:
... Is there a way to get the bounces to go to the reply to address?
I've never really cared to, but now that he mentions it ... It would be
nice.
If you use this class, you can just specify the bounce address in
Return-Path header and the class

Jochem Maas wrote:
Justin Patrin wrote:
accurate. If it is, why hasn't the mail function been modified in
the more recent builds? I've been using PHP since it was invented
never had a problem with mail.
Also note that your form page is currently using the PHP mail()
function, which doesn't

At 00:01 08-04-2004, Ryan Jameson (USA) wrote:
I know this isn't technically DB related but this is the list that I
use. I'd just like to know if anyone else thinks the below statement is
accurate. If it is, why hasn't the mail function been modified in the
more recent builds? I've been using PHP